Publication | Closed Access
Feminist Research Methods: <i>A Content Analysis of Psychology and Social Science Textbooks</i>
38
Citations
38
References
1995
Year
Queer TheoryResearch MethodsFeminist InquirySocial SciencesGender IdentityFeminist EthicsFeminist ResearchGender StudiesFeminist KnowledgeFeminist Research MethodsContent AnalysisWomen StudiesFeminist Literary TheorySexismFeminist ScholarshipFeminist ScienceFeminist Political TheoryFeminist TheoryNonsexist LanguageFeminist MethodologiesFeminist PhilosophySexuality StudiesSociologyFeminist Method
This research examined the extent to which research methods textbooks in psychology and general social science discuss feminist challenges and approaches to social science ( N = 40 textbooks). Two dimensions were examined. First, within the “nonsexist” dimensions, textbooks were analyzed to determine if they used nonsexist language and if they discussed ways to avoid sexist bias in research. The second dimension was “profeminist.” Within this dimension four subdomains receiving considerable attention from feminist researchers were explored: (a) epistemology (or “ways of knowing”); (b) objectivity and subjectivity; (c) the relationship between the researcher and the researched; and (d) qualitative versus quantitative methodologies. Results demonstrated that although the majority of the textbooks did not use sexist language, they did not move much beyond this standard. There was little discussion of feminist challenges to these research issues. When the textbook authors did mention these topics, their analyses were most often inconsistent with feminist approaches.
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